US3111350A - Recirculating roller bearing - Google Patents

Recirculating roller bearing Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3111350A
US3111350A US114515A US11451561A US3111350A US 3111350 A US3111350 A US 3111350A US 114515 A US114515 A US 114515A US 11451561 A US11451561 A US 11451561A US 3111350 A US3111350 A US 3111350A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
channel
rollers
block
roller
extending
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US114515A
Inventor
Howard W Anderson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
KAYDON ENGINEERING Corp
Original Assignee
KAYDON ENGINEERING CORP
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by KAYDON ENGINEERING CORP filed Critical KAYDON ENGINEERING CORP
Priority to US114515A priority Critical patent/US3111350A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3111350A publication Critical patent/US3111350A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16CSHAFTS; FLEXIBLE SHAFTS; ELEMENTS OR CRANKSHAFT MECHANISMS; ROTARY BODIES OTHER THAN GEARING ELEMENTS; BEARINGS
    • F16C29/00Bearings for parts moving only linearly
    • F16C29/04Ball or roller bearings
    • F16C29/06Ball or roller bearings in which the rolling bodies circulate partly without carrying load
    • F16C29/0614Ball or roller bearings in which the rolling bodies circulate partly without carrying load with a shoe type bearing body, e.g. a body facing one side of the guide rail or track only
    • F16C29/0616Ball or roller bearings in which the rolling bodies circulate partly without carrying load with a shoe type bearing body, e.g. a body facing one side of the guide rail or track only for supporting load essentially in a single direction
    • F16C29/0619Ball or roller bearings in which the rolling bodies circulate partly without carrying load with a shoe type bearing body, e.g. a body facing one side of the guide rail or track only for supporting load essentially in a single direction with rollers or needles
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16CSHAFTS; FLEXIBLE SHAFTS; ELEMENTS OR CRANKSHAFT MECHANISMS; ROTARY BODIES OTHER THAN GEARING ELEMENTS; BEARINGS
    • F16C33/00Parts of bearings; Special methods for making bearings or parts thereof
    • F16C33/30Parts of ball or roller bearings
    • F16C33/46Cages for rollers or needles
    • F16C33/50Cages for rollers or needles formed of interconnected members, e.g. chains

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Rolling Contact Bearings (AREA)

Description

H. W. ANDERSON Filed June 2, 1961 RECIRCULATING ROLLER BEARING A ,g "31 33 1- J5 Nov. 19, 1963 United States Patent 3,111,350 RECERCULATING RLLER BEARNG Howard W. Anderson, Muskegon, Mich., assignor to The Kaydon Engineering Corporation, Muskegon, lich., a corporation of Michigan Filed June 2, 1961, Ser. No. 114,515 Claims. (Cl. 30S-6) The present invention relates to a recirculating roller bearing construction, and more particularly to an irnproved bearing of this type which incorporates novel structure to eliminate the deficiencies of heretofore known rccirculating roller bearings.
Recirculating roller bearings heretofore provided have been of inferior design and relatively poor performance. Such bearings rely for roller circulation, or transmission of movement, upon direct contact of one roller against the next, or in other words pushing of one roller by the following roller. wear, but results in a keystoning effect in the unloaded zone tending to cause lock-up of the rollers. The rollers also tend to be forced abruptly and unpredictably into the loading Zone, causing erratic operation. In addition, no effective guidance is provided for the rollers, resulting in sliding and skewing thereof to increase further the friction in the bearing and the wear on the parts. The friction forces in these bearings consequently are relatively high and, particularly at low operating speeds, very erratic, and the bearing construction is subject to excessive and non-uniform wear. The efficiency of such prior bearings, therefore, is far below what might be achieved, and what might be reasonably expected of an anti-friction roller bearing.
The present invention provides means for guiding the rollers in the desired path and preventing the skewing and cooking of the rollers which commonly occurs in present bearings of this type, and thus avoiding the increased friction and wear and the impaired operation resulting therefrom. The invention also provides a cage which assures uniform spacing of the rollers from each other to obtain proper load distribution and avoid friction generated by contact of the rollers against each other, and effects the desired movement of the rollers about the bearing block or in other words assures proper circulation of the rollers.
There is also provided an approach ramp to the load zone which allows the rollers gradually to enter such zone and pick up their shares of the load, thus avoiding the erratic operation characteristic of present recirculating roller bearing constructions. The free movement and smooth, uniform, and reliable operation of the bearing construction embodying the invention, resulting from the accuracy of structure and alignment of parts and from the minimization of friction in the bearing construction itself, make the present bearings particularly well suited to use in applications requiring great accuracy without sacrifice of freedom of movement. The bearing construction is well adapted, for example, to use in precision grinding machines, but is applicable to any mechanism involving linear motion between parts.
lt is accordingly an important object of the invention to provide a recirculating roller bearing construction having greatly reduced friction characteristics.
Another object is the provision of a recirculating roller bearing construction in which wear of the parts is reduced and rendered more uniform for greatly increased useful life.
Another object is the provision of a recirculating roller bearing in which positive guidance is provided for the rollers throughout their path of travel to prevent skewing or cocking thereof and the resulting increased friction and greater wear.
This not only increases friction and Y 3,lll,350 Patented Nov. 19, 1963 rice A further Lobject of the invention is the provision of a bearing construction of the type indicated in which the rollers are positively maintained in uniformly spaced relation -to avoid friction resulting from the engagement of the rollers against each `other and to lachieve uniform load distribution.
Another yobject of the invention is to provide a Cage construction for the rollers by which the rollers are uniformly moved around the path provided therefor, avoiding keystoning and locking up of the rollers in the unloaded zone.
The invention has as another object the provision of ramp means yfor leffect-ing gradual entry into the load zone of the individual rollers and gradual picking up of the load lthereby, to assure smooth, predictable, and uniform operation of the bearing.
It is also an object of the invention to provide a reci-rcula-ting 4roller bearing construction in which bunching or locking of rollers even at llow speeds will not occur.
A further object is the provision of a recirculating roller bearing construction in which movement of the rollers 4through the desired path is achieved without the pushing of one -roller by a following roller.
Another object is the provision of a recirculating roller bearing construction facilitating precision manufacture and assembly of the structure to reduce Ifriction and wear.
Still another object is the provision of a recirculating roller bearing including 'a bearing block formed in sections for easy manufacture.
Other and further objects, advantages, and features of the inve-ntion will become apparent to those skilled in the art Vfrom the following detailed description, taken in conjunctio-n with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a side elevational view of one embodiment of the invention, partly broken away for clearer illustration;
FIG. 2 is a plan View thereof;
FIG. 3 is an end elevational view thereof;
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken substantially as indicated by the line 4 4 in FIG. `l; and
FIG. 5 is a horizontal sectional lview taken substantially as indicated by the line S-5 in FIG. 1.
As shown in the drawings, the recirculating roller bearing construction according to the present invention, generally indicated as 10, comprises a plurality of bearing rollers arranged to move in either direction in an endless or continuous path about the periphery of an elongated bearing block. The bearing is adapted to be disposed between relatively movable parts of a machine or other structure, being mounted on one of the parts. In the embodiment illustrated, the block is formed of three sections, a central section 11, and a pair of left and right side sections 12 and 13, which are of substantially identical construction, but reversed so that the inner or opposed facing sides thereof are mirror images of each other. The block 11 is rectangular in cross section, having ilat parallel sides and flat opposed and parallel bounding surfaces 14 and 15, with rounded ends 16 providing arcuately or otherwise curved surfaces connecting and merging with the surfaces 14 and 15. Extending transversely through the central block section 11 are a number of bores 17, in this case three, and a number of bores 18, two being employed in the present construction. Aligning dowels and securing bolts extend through the bores upon assembly of the block, as hereinafter explained. The flat surface 14 defines a loading area or zone.
The left and right side block sections 12 and 13 have the inner faces thereof formed each with a raised portion 19 exactly corresponding to the central block section 11 in outline, but somewhat larger in size or dimensions, as
best shown in FIG. l, so that the central section 11 may be arranged in centered relation to the raised portions 19, leaving a uniform marginal flat face portion of the raised portion projecting outwardly about the entire periphery of the section 11. The raised portions 19 also provide surfaces extending laterally outwardly from the central section 11 to the inner surfaces of the sections 12 and 13 for purposes of clearance, as will become evident from further description. The laterally outwardly extending surface of each raised portion 19 which extends parallel to and adjacent to the flat loading surface portion 14 of the central section, indicated at 20, is in the present instance formed flush with or as an extension of the adjacent portion of the peripheral surface of the respective side section 12 or 13. The rounded ends of the raised portions 19 extend to the opposite at edge portions 21, which lie parallel to the at portion opposite the flat loading surface portion 14. As is best evident from FIG. 4, the flat portions 21 are spaced inwardly of the peripheral surface portions of the side sections 12 and 13 opposite the surface portions with which the flat surfaces of the raised portions merge.
Each of the side sections 12 and |113 is formed with bores 22 extending transversely therethrough substantially identical to the bores 17 of the central section 111, and so located as to register with the bores 17 when the central section 1.1 is accurately centered relative to the raised portions 1119. The left side section 12 is formed with a pair of bores 23 having countersinks or counterbores at the outer face of the section, and the right side section 13 is provided with threaded bores 24, the bores 23 and 24 registering with the bores 1-8 in the central section -11 upon centering of the central section relative to the raised portions .19 of the side sections. Dowels 25 are inserted through aligned registering bores 17 and 22 of the three sections, as best shown in FIG. 5, in assembling the sections of the block, to assure proper centering of the central section on the raised portions 19, and bolts 26 are passed through the respectively aligned bores 23, 18, and 24, and threadedly secured in the bores 24, to secure the sections in the desired accurately assembled relation described. Adjacent their `ends, the side sections i112 and 13 are provided with bores 27 extending from the peripheral surface of each section which extends ush with the at surface 20 to the opposite peripheral edge surface which projects beyond the surface 21, to accommodate suitable mounting bolts or the like by which the block may be secured to one of the relatively movable parts between which the bearing construction is disposed. The bores may be suitably counterbored, to avoid projection of the bolt heads outwardly of the block surface.
While the block may be formed in one piece, or of more or fewer sections than three, if desired, it will be evident that the parts may be much more readily formed with the desired accuracy, and finished to a desired smoothness to reduce friction, when the block is formed in at least three sections as shown and the sections are assembled after being separately formed and finished. The block construction also facilitates assembly therewith of the bearing rollers, accomplished by application to the block of a roller assembly as described herebelow.
As appears clearly from the drawings, and particularly FIGS. 4 and 5, the block when assembled provides an endless or continuous channel extending about the block, the bottom of which channel is dened bythe peripheral surfaces 114, 15, and 16 of the central section '11. Working in this channel is an endless bearing roller assembly, designated generally as 30. IThe roller assembly comprises a number of rollers 31 each having a length just slightly less than the Width of the channel, or in other lwords the distance between the inner faces of the raised portions l19 of the block side sections .12 `and 13. 'Ihe rollers are disposed transversely of the channel, in spaced parallel relation with each other, as will be clear from the drawings, particularly FIGS. 2 and 4. Each roller has an axial bore 32 therethrough, through which extends a pin 33 on which the roller is rotatable. The ends of the pin 33 project from the roller, and are connected to the pins of each of the adjacent rollers by rigid links apertured at their ends to receive the pins therethrough. The links 34 are held assembled with the pins 33 and rollers 311 by any suitable means, such as snap rings 35 engaging in suitable circumferential grooves in the ends of the pins. The ilinks maintain the rollers in uniformly spaced relation, and dene a cage exible in the plane of movement of the rollers for simultaneous movement in the channel as the rollers in the loading zone defined by the flat surface portion 14 of the central section 11 are rotated in one direction or the other by relative movement of the parts between which the bearing is arranged.
The links 34 and the projecting ends `of the pins 33 are accommodated in the clearance space provided by the laterally outwardly extending edge surfaces of the raised portions 19 such as the surfaces 20 and 21. The spacing of these surfaces from the surfaces 14, 15, and 16 of the central section 11 defining the bottom of .the channel is sufficiently less than the radius of the rollers 31 to allow the rollers to engage on the channel bottom ywhile allowing .a certain clearance between the links 34- and the edge surfaces of the raised portions 19. When the rollers 31 pass along the ilat loading zone surface 14 they project outwardly of the peripheral edge portions of the block side sections 12 and 13, -as evident from the drawings. The opposite or intermediate surface portion 15 of the central section 11 is spaced inwardly from the plane of the adjacent peripheral edge surfaces of the side sections by 'a distance greater than the diameter of the rollers, or in other words this portion of the roller channel is in effect formed in the bottom of a deeper channel. 'l'hus the rollers may move freely between the central section 11, or the bottom of the channel, and a surface on which the bearing 10 is mounted. The bottom of the roller channel at the curved ends of section 11 preferably is similarly offset inwardly from the adjacent end surfaces of the side sections so that the rollers will not project outwardly of the block ends as they move along the curved end surfaces.
It will be evident that as the rollers move about the bearing block in the path defined by the channel, they are prevented from skewing by the side Walls of the channel, and thus are guided in their path of movement with their axes substantially normal to the direction in which they move. The rounded end surfaces 16 of the center section 11 serve as ramps by which the rollers are moved gradually to the loading zone to pick up the load -in a relatively gradual, uniform manner so that there is no erratic operation resulting from the rollers being suddenly or abruptly forced into the loading zone as a result of pressure applied thereto by other rollers, as from a piledup or jkeystoned group of rollers in the unloaded zone. As already noted, the rollers =are moved as a unit about the block by reason of their connection by the iiexible cage, and held in uniformly spaced relation thereby for proper load distribution and avoidance of contact with each other, eliminating keystoning and the like. It will be apparent that the rollers may be rotatable mounted otherwise than by the pins 33. For example, the rollers may be provided with transmissions journalled in the ends of the links 34.
The parts of the bearing construction are very accurately formed, and appropriate parts are made of suitably hard wear-resisting material and with a smooth iinish. Any possible interference between parts is thus eliminated, and very low and uniform frictional characteristics are imparted to the bearing.
The embodiment of the invention specifically disclosed herein is exemplary and illustrative, and many changes and modifications may be made therein without departure from the inventive concept. Accordingly, it is not intended that the invention be limited otherwise than as required by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
I claim:
l. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising an elongated bearing block formed of three sections including a central section and a pair of side sections engaging opposite sides of said central section, the central section having a pair of substantially parallel flat surfaces extending between said side sections and arcuately curved end surfaces connecting the ends of said flat surfaces, one of said flat surfaces defining a loading zone, raised portions on said side sections engaging the sides of the central section corresponding in outline to the central section but of greater dimensions to provide llat faces at the opposite edges of said flat surfaces projecting uniformly outwardly therefrom in planes substantially normal to the surfaces to define therewith a channel of uniform depth and width extending continuously about the block providing an endless roller pathway, a plurality of rollers disposed in spaced parallel relation in the channel each extending transversely thereof and having a length substantially equal to the width of the channel and a radius greater than the channel depth, a plurality of pins each extending axially of and rotatably carrying one of said rollers, link means extending between and connecting the ends of the pins of adjacent rollers to maintain the rollers in said spaced parallel relation and defining a flexible roller cage extending Iabout said central section, surfaces on the side sections extending llaterally outwardly from said fiat faces to accommodate said link means and the ends of the pins, said rollers projecting radially outwardly beyond the block in said loading zone and lying within the block along the remainder of the channel, means locating the block sections in precisely assembled relation, and means securing the sections in said relation.
2. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising an elongated bearing block formed of three sections including a central section and a pair of side sections engaging opposite sides of said central section, the central section having a flat surface defining a loading zone and an intermediate surface spaced vtherefrom extending between said side sections and also having curved end `surfaces connecting the ends of said flat and intermediate surfaces, said central section surfaces defining the bottom of a channel extending continuously about the block, flat faces on the inner sides of said side sections defining the walls of said channel, surfaces on the side sections extending laterally outwardly of said fiat faces in uniformly spaced relation to the central section surfaces, a plurality of rollers disposed in spaced parallel relation each extending transversely of the channel on said channel bottom and having a radius greater .than the channel depth and a length substantially equal to the width of the channel, a plurality of pins each rotatably carrying one of said rollers, link means connecting the pins of adjacent rollers to maintain the rollers in said spaced parallel relation and defining a flexible roller cage extending about said central section with the link means and the ends of the pins `overlying said laterally outwardly extending surfaces, said channel bottom being recessed relative to the bounding surfaces of the block defined by peripheral edges of the side sections, said recessing being less than the roller diameter along said loading zone and at least equal to said diameter along the remainder of the channel, means locating the block sections in precisely -assembled relation, and means securing the sections in said relation.
3. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising a bearing block formed of a plurality of sections, means locating the block sections in precisely assembled relation, means securing the sections in said relation, said sections being shaped to define a continuous channel of substantially uniform depth and width extending about said block and including a flat loading zone portion with ramp portions at the ends thereof, a plurality of rollers' rotatably mounting each of said rollers, and link means connecting said roller shaft means disposed axially outwardly of and maintaining the rollers in said spaced parallel relation, to define a flexible roller cage, surfaces extending laterally outwardly of the walls of the channel accommodating and being overlain by said link means, the channel bottom at said loading Zone portion being recessed relative to the adjacent block surface a distance less than the roller diameter, and the opposite portion of the channel bottom being recessed relative to the opposite block surface a distance at least equal to said diameter.
4. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising a bearing block formed of a plurality of longitudinally divided sections shaped to define a continuous channel of substantially uniform width and depth extending longitudinally about said block and including a pair of ramp portions having a liat loading portion extending therebetween, the bottom of said channel being offset inwardly from the peripheral surface of the block, a plurality of rollers disposed in spaced parallel relation each extending transversely of the channel on the channel bottom and having a radius greater than the channel depth and a length substantially equal to the channel width, endless flexible roller cage means linking said rollers in separately rotatable spaced parallel relation, means providing clearance for said cage means laterally outwardly of the channel, the bottom of said channel at said loading portion being spaced inwardly relative to the adjacent peripheral surface of the block by a distance less than the roller diameter, and spacing means projecting outwardly relative to the portion of the channel bottom opposite said loading portion a distance at least equal to the roller diameter.
5. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising an elongated bearing block formed of three sections including `a central section and a pair of side sections, said central section having a pair of opposite substantially parallel flat faces connected by arcuately curved end faces, `a raised portion on each of said side sections engaged `against a side of the central section having a periphery defined by surfaces offset uniformly outwardly of said central section faces to extend parallel thereto laterally outwardly of Athe central section and also having a face portion in -a plane normal to said central section faces extending between said faces and said surfaces, whereby lan endless channel providing -a roller pathway is defined extending about said block having ra loading zone defined by one of said flat faces, a plurality of rollers disposed in said channel in uniformly spaced parallel relation each extending transversely of the channel and of a length substantially equal to the channel width and ya radius greater than the channel depth, a plurality of pins each rotatably carrying one of said rollers and projecting over said periphery-defining surfaces, and endless link means connecting said roller pins to m-aintain said spaced parallel roller relation, said block side sections having peripheral edge portions spaced outwardly relative to the bottom of the channel, said spacing along the loading zone being less than the roller diameter and `along the opposite flat face being greater than said diameter.
6. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising a bearing block formed of three sections including a central section and -a pair of side sections, said central section having at least one substantially flat face defining a loading `Zone and curved end faces connecting to said fiat face at its ends, a raised portion on each of said side sections engaged against ya side of the central section having la periphery defined by surfaces offset uniformly outwardly of said central section flat face to extend parallel thereto laterally outwardly of the central section and also having `a face portion extending between said faces and said surfaces, whereby an endless channel providing a roller pathway is defined extending about said block, a plurality of rollers disposed in said channel in uniformly spaced parallel relation each extending transversely of the channel and having a length substantially equal to the channel width and a radius greater than the channel depth, `a plurality of pins each rotatably carrying one of said rollers and projecting over said peripherydefining surfaces, `and endless link means connecting said roller pins to maintain said spaced parallel roller relation, said loading zone flat face being spaced relative to the adjacent peripheral edge portions of the block side sections Ito effect radial projection of rollers in the loading zone outwardly relative to said edge portions.
7. A recirculating roller bearing construction for mounting between relatively movable members, comprising a bearing block, a roller guidance pathway extending continuously about said block dened by a bottom surface and a pair of parallel guiding side surfaces extending in planes substantially normal lto said bottom surface, a plurality of rollers disposed in spaced parallel relation to each other in said pathway each extending transversely thereof and having a length corresponding closely to the spacing between said side surfaces, endless means conneoting said rollers in said spaced relation in individually rotatable relation, said pathway having ya depth appreciably less than half the diameter of the rollers, means providing clearance laterally `outwardly of the pathway to accommodate projection of said endless connecting means longitudinally outwardly of the rollers, a loading zone defined by a portion `of the bottom of the pathway spaced relative to the `adjacent block surface to effect radial projection of the rollers outwardly of said block surface, and means for mounting the block on the surface of a relatively movable member with an opposite portion of the pathway bottom spaced from said member surfac by a distance not less than the roller diameter.
`8. A recirculating roller bearing construction comprising a ybearing block, a roller guidance pathway extending continuously about said block defined by a bottom surface and a pair of parallel guiding side surfaces extending in planes intersecting said bottom lsurface at the opposite edges thereof and also intersecting the outer block surface, a plurality of rollers disposed in spaced parallel relation to each other in said pathway each extending transversely thereof land having a length corresponding closely to the spacing between said side surfaces for guidance thereby, and endless means connecting said -rollers in said spaced relation in individually rotatable relation, said pathway having a depth appreciably less than the radius of the rollers, la portion of the pathway bottom being spaced inwardly relative to the adjacent outer block surface by a distance less than Ithe roller ydiameter to cifect radial projection of the rollers outwar-dly beyond said block surface, means providing clearance laterally outwardly of the pathway for said endless connecting means, and means for mounting the block on the surface of a relatively movable member with an `opposite portion of said pathway bottom spaced `from said member surface by not less, than the roller diameter.
9. A recirculating roller bearing construction cornprising a bearing block, an endless roller guidance channel o-f substantially uniform depth and width within a peripheral surface of said lblock extending `about said block having a iiat loading portion and an opposite intermediate portion spaced from said at portion with curved portions extending between `and connecting adjacent ends of the tlat and intermediate portions, a plurality of rollers disposed in said channel in parallel uniformly spaced relation to each other extending transversely of and fitting closely in the channel, the channel bottom at said flat loading portion being spaced inwardly relative to the adjacent portion of said block surface a distance less than the diameter of the rollers and at said intermediate portion being spaced inwardly relative vto the opposite block surface portion `a distance at least equal to the roller diameter, endless cage mean-s linking said rollers in rotatable space-maintaining relation, and means providing clearance for said cage means laterally outwardly of the channel.
10. A recirculating roller bearing :construction comprising a bearing block, an endless roller guidance channel extending about said block having a flat portion and an intermediate portion generally opposed to said flat vportion Wit-h ramp portions extending between and connecting `adjacent ends of the fiat and intermediate portionsa plurality 'of rollers disposed in said channel in parallel uniformly spaced relation to each other extending transversely of and tting closely in the channel,
the bottom of the channel at said at portion being spaced inwardly of the adjacent lblock surface a distance less than the diameter of the rollers, spacing means projecting :outwardly relative to the channel bottom at sai-d intermediate portion a `distance not less than the roller diameter, endless cage means linking said rollers in rotatable space-maintaining relation, and means providing clearance for 'said Cage means laterally outwardly of the l channel.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,664,970 Warshaw Jan. 5, 1954 2,723,886 Warshaw Nov. 15, 1955 2,889,181 Lang June 2, 1959 3,003,828 Stark Oct. 10, 1961 FOREIGN PATENTS 556,746 Great Britain Oct. 20, 1943 1,073,668 France Mar. 24, 1954

Claims (1)

10. A RECIRCULATING ROLLER BEARING CONSTRUCTION COMPRISING A BEARING BLOCK, AN ENDLESS ROLLER GUIDANCE CHANNEL EXTENDING ABOUT SAID BLOCK HAVING A FLAT PORTION AND AN INTERMEDIATE PORTION GENERALLY OPPOSED TO SAID FLAT PORTION WITH RAMP PORTIONS EXTENDING BETWEEN AND CONNECTING ADJACENT ENDS OF THE FLAT AND INTERMEDIATE PORTIONS, A PLURALITY OF ROLLERS DISPOSED IN SAID CHANNEL IN PARALLEL UNIFORMLY SPACED RELATION TO EACH OTHER EXTENDING TRANSVERSELY OF AND FITTING CLOSELY IN THE CHANNEL, THE BOTTOM OF THE CHANNEL AT SAID FLAT PORTION BEING SPACED INWARDLY OF THE ADJACENT BLOCK SURFACE A DISTANCE LESS THAN THE DIAMETER OF THE ROLLERS, SPACING MEANS PROJECTING OUTWARDLY RELATIVE TO THE CHANNEL BOTTOM AT SAID INTERMEDIATE PORTION A DISTANCE NOT LESS THAN THE ROLLER DIAMETER, ENDLESS CAGE MEANS LINKING SAID ROLLERS IN ROTATABLE SPACE-MAINTAINING RELATION, AND MEANS PROVIDING CLEARANCE FOR SAID CAGE MEANS LATERALLY OUTWARDLY OF THE CHANNEL.
US114515A 1961-06-02 1961-06-02 Recirculating roller bearing Expired - Lifetime US3111350A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US114515A US3111350A (en) 1961-06-02 1961-06-02 Recirculating roller bearing

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US114515A US3111350A (en) 1961-06-02 1961-06-02 Recirculating roller bearing

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3111350A true US3111350A (en) 1963-11-19

Family

ID=22355689

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US114515A Expired - Lifetime US3111350A (en) 1961-06-02 1961-06-02 Recirculating roller bearing

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3111350A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3219398A (en) * 1962-11-19 1965-11-23 Kaydon Engineering Corp Articulated roller bearing construction
DE1258670B (en) * 1965-11-03 1968-01-11 Mueller Georg Kugellager Straight guide element with rolling pressure bodies
JPS4936369U (en) * 1972-07-04 1974-03-30
US4163488A (en) * 1976-01-28 1979-08-07 Auto Systems Limited Conveyor systems
DE3038377A1 (en) * 1979-10-18 1981-05-07 Magyar Goerdueloecsapagy Mueve ROLLER CIRCUIT SHOE
DE3048228A1 (en) * 1980-12-20 1982-07-15 Schaeffler Ohg Industriewerk ROLLER BEARING FOR LONG-TERM MOBILE STORAGE OF A PART WITH A STRAIGHT CAREER
US5230568A (en) * 1990-07-12 1993-07-27 Ina Lineartechnik Ohg Linear bearing
US5277660A (en) * 1992-02-04 1994-01-11 Gkn Automotive, Inc. Tripod constant velocity joint with chain linked rollers

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB556746A (en) * 1942-04-15 1943-10-20 Rawson Smith Improvements relating to antifriction devices for machine tools and other apparatus
US2664970A (en) * 1952-02-20 1954-01-05 Market Forge Company Lifting truck
FR1073668A (en) * 1953-01-31 1954-09-28 Roller or ball bearings
US2723886A (en) * 1953-06-10 1955-11-15 Market Forge Company Antifriction device
US2889181A (en) * 1955-11-29 1959-06-02 M Ten Bosch Inc Anti-friction bearing unit
US3003828A (en) * 1957-06-25 1961-10-10 James A Stark Recirculating bearing

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB556746A (en) * 1942-04-15 1943-10-20 Rawson Smith Improvements relating to antifriction devices for machine tools and other apparatus
US2664970A (en) * 1952-02-20 1954-01-05 Market Forge Company Lifting truck
FR1073668A (en) * 1953-01-31 1954-09-28 Roller or ball bearings
US2723886A (en) * 1953-06-10 1955-11-15 Market Forge Company Antifriction device
US2889181A (en) * 1955-11-29 1959-06-02 M Ten Bosch Inc Anti-friction bearing unit
US3003828A (en) * 1957-06-25 1961-10-10 James A Stark Recirculating bearing

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3219398A (en) * 1962-11-19 1965-11-23 Kaydon Engineering Corp Articulated roller bearing construction
DE1258670B (en) * 1965-11-03 1968-01-11 Mueller Georg Kugellager Straight guide element with rolling pressure bodies
JPS4936369U (en) * 1972-07-04 1974-03-30
US4163488A (en) * 1976-01-28 1979-08-07 Auto Systems Limited Conveyor systems
DE3038377A1 (en) * 1979-10-18 1981-05-07 Magyar Goerdueloecsapagy Mueve ROLLER CIRCUIT SHOE
DE3048228A1 (en) * 1980-12-20 1982-07-15 Schaeffler Ohg Industriewerk ROLLER BEARING FOR LONG-TERM MOBILE STORAGE OF A PART WITH A STRAIGHT CAREER
US4405185A (en) * 1980-12-20 1983-09-20 Ina Walzlager Schaeffler Kg Roller bearing
US5230568A (en) * 1990-07-12 1993-07-27 Ina Lineartechnik Ohg Linear bearing
US5277660A (en) * 1992-02-04 1994-01-11 Gkn Automotive, Inc. Tripod constant velocity joint with chain linked rollers

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3552806A (en) Full recirculating linear ball bearings with shaft telescoping while transmitting torque
US4444443A (en) Unlimited sliding ball bearing spline assembly
US6601551B1 (en) Mechanical transmission device for engine with variable volume displacement
US3111350A (en) Recirculating roller bearing
US3190703A (en) Bearing structure
US3792616A (en) Reciprocating drive
KR19990044158A (en) Sliding guide and its end rolling element chain
US2365154A (en) Antifriction bearing
US3003827A (en) Ball guide for axially movable machine parts with small axial stroke
US10378581B2 (en) Linear motion guide unit
US10436248B2 (en) Motion guide device
US4273389A (en) Ball spline bearing assembly
JPH01169118A (en) Spacer for cross roller bearing
US3547502A (en) Rectilinear motion bearings
US3920289A (en) Linear roller bearing
US3086824A (en) Antifriction bearing construction having orbiting ball arrangement
EP0042758B2 (en) Improvements in and relating to linear bearings
US3802752A (en) Roller bearing
US10330150B2 (en) Rolling guide device
US2729520A (en) Roller bearing assembly
JP6452303B2 (en) Clamper with linear motion guide
US3205029A (en) Roller bearing assembly
US4558910A (en) Linear slide roller bearing unit
TW201600744A (en) Rolling device
US3246933A (en) Way bearing